May 1, 2008
Democracy Now! host and author of Standing Up to the Madness, Amy Goodman, explains how the Patriot Act has impacted Americans' civil liberties. WSJ bureau chief and author of Slavery by Another Name, Douglas Blackmon, defines what he calls the "re-enslavement" of African Americans and tells how it occurred.
Amy Goodman

Author of "Standing up to the Madness," explains how the Patriot Act has impacted Americans' civil liberties. (3:24)
Journalist Amy Goodman is host of the daily TV/radio news program Democracy Now!, which airs on more than 700 stations around the world. She's received acclaim for exposés of human rights violations in East Timor and Nigeria and won many of the most prestigious awards in journalism. Goodman began her career in broadcasting as a volunteer at NY's Pacifica station WBAI, ultimately becoming its news director. With her brother, David, she's co-authored three books, including Standing Up to the Madness.
Douglas A. Blackmon
Douglas A. Blackmon has written about race, the economy and American society and been nominated multiple times for the Pulitzer Prize. Now Atlanta bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal, he was previously an Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter and managing editor of a Little Rock, AR paper. Blackmon wrote his first newspaper story at age 12, in his Mississippi hometown, and has penned his first book, Slavery by Another Name, revealing a form of U.S. neoslavery that thrived after legal abolition.


